Replying to Avatar boston wine

Rex, man. Of all the nostriches here, you’re one who has made me dig deep and think a LOT about people, politics, nuance, etc.

Sometimes the stuff you share is loving, wise, and compassionate, and I appreciate you for it.

Other times (like this one) I’m afraid it comes across as cruel and ignorant. And it’s hard, but also kind of amazing to have a digital space where one can organically appreciate that kind of complexity without algorithms and all that.

I’ve never had the experience of feeling like I’m in the wrong physical body. I can’t imagine how difficult, distracting, and complicated it must feel. But the fact that so many in our society refuse to even try to offer compassion or acceptance toward people living such a unique and often hard experience is discouraging to me. Because I love people, and seeing suffering makes me sad. It’s why I Bitcoin.

It’s of course true that tiny, extreme factions can and do act horribly, on any end of the cultural/political spectrum. And I’m not here to make excuses for anyone’s bad behavior. (It’s obvious when it occurs, ‘nuff said).

But if we get hooked by that divisive culture war rhetoric, then we’re failing - in that moment - to bring about a better world.

When a minority of people in our culture have overwhelmingly been the recipients of scorn, abuse, and violence, it feels wrong to me to take any approach other than listening. Because I just don’t know what it’s like, but keeping an open heart has never failed me before.

I didn’t read this thread in detail, but my sense is that it got pretty hostile. For my own well-being, I’m not going down that rabbit hole (and I still have to go get ready for a trip).

But since it’s nostr, where I have gotten to know the two humans having this conversation, I’m not just scrolling on. I respect you enough to say, I believe you’re a good person but I think you’re wrong about this, because if we haven’t lived it, we can’t know. I hope you’ll consider that.

Again, culture war BS is just not something I’m interested in. Red blue white black rainbow whatever, I’m in this for all the other humans and want to listen to and honor anyone willing to share their experience of this life.

Okay that’s all I got for now. Hope this note ultimately acts to bring a little more love to every side of the scale ✌️

I ain't a hero.

Imma faulty human being, standing as sovereign as possible.

Full of bile and bias.

Never forget that.

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Understood & accepted as such 🫡

I have biases of my own, and I am gradually de-conditioning from them, as I unlearn some of the things that we grow up being told are truths.

I’m doing this with ingrained ideas from across the range of the socio-cultural-political spectrum.

Not asking you to change or agree - I am simply offering my perspective in order to foster the ideals of compassion and love that give me faith in people.

Nostr allows for this and it’s beautiful.

Woke policies are not loving.

They promote hate and envy.

I’m not advocating for work policies, don’t get me wrong. (I’m nearly as “allergic” to the hardcore left rhetoric as I am to much of Trump’s vibes). Communism is predicated on theft, but so is fiat-based capitalism.

Issues like transgender rights are deeply nuanced, and ultimately every individual’s circumstance is going to be unique, so I’m not writing this to argue for a specific policy approach.

I’m looking at it from a much more “grassroots” and “peer to peer” level. I haven’t experienced the things a trans person has, so I’m aware that my perspective is necessarily limited.

But when someone tells me they are suffering deeply, or feel like something is very wrong, my inclination is to listen, and to try to understand. I try to imagine if they were my brother, a friend, or (someday) my child. How would I approach their vulnerability, their trust in me, in a way that I would look back on and know I acted from love.

Policies aside, to me it’s easy to believe someone who says they were born in a female body but felt like a boy/man their entire life. I’ve never lived that - how could I presume to know otherwise? My best move is to be compassionate towards that person, and start from there.

There’s hateful, divisive rhetoric throughout our society. But I find it exists far more on digital platforms than in the real world. Because most people are genuinely good.

The left-side cancel culture and the right-side culture war (to overgeneralize a lot) has put these conversations into a hypersensitive, existential overdrive: “if you don’t agree with X then you’re a terrible person and don’t deserve to exist, because you must believe Y” is promoted everywhere. Because it gets reactions and clicks, and because clicks generate ad revenue. Follow the money right?

To me, the reality is more nuanced, but also simpler:

- Love your neighbor.

- When someone tells you who they are, believe them (which is perfectly compatible with “don’t trust, verify” by the way).

If something makes me react strongly, with discomfort, or the type of outrage that comes from “that voice I heard somewhere but it didn’t originate within me”, it’s usually because I’ve internalized a viewpoint from the cultural influences around me, and it’s time to get curious about why I trust that perspective and whether I genuinely believe in it, or I just heard it enough to assume it’s true.

Again, this goes far beyond right/left disagreements. This is a facet of my lifelong work, spiritually and psychologically. The reason I responded at first was precisely because your posts have motivated me to do a fair amount of that work.

*woke, not “work”, of course